Germany and France are reviving military cooperation — but there are still no plans for an EU army

The European Union (EU) flag is seen on a sunny day at the Chancellery in Berlin Thomson Reuters BRUSSELS (Reuters) - Germany and France will relaunch closer European military cooperation this month and could start a common defense fund but there are no plans to form an EU army, officials say.

EU foreign policy chief Federica Mogherini will propose deepening defense links at a June 28-29 leaders summit, despite rising Euroscepticism, and argue that EU integration can work to maintain Europe's clout alongside the United States.

Proponents say closer defense cooperation among the European allies is needed particularly to reduce costly duplication in production of defense systems and programs at a time when greater investment is required in defense technology.

British scepticism about European integration has often hampered EU defense plans. After Britain's June 23 referendum, officials want to use the proposals to cement Britain's EU membership if London decides to stay. But they will still go ahead if British voters decide to leave.

"The goal is a European defense union," said a senior German government official. "That is not about competing with NATO but we need a stronger Europe. If we wait for the Eurosceptics, then we will only go backwards," the official said.

Shortcomings in Europe's 2011 Libyan air campaign and aging equipment in African missions have also convinced French officials. France sees military independence as paramount, but wants to move ahead with ideas blocked by Britain, such as a joint EU command headquarters and shared military assets.

French military patrol near the Eiffel Tower the day after a series of deadly attacks in Paris, November 14, 2015. REUTERS/Yves Herman "The ideal situation would be that Britain remains in the EU but no longer stops others from developing a stronger, integrated foreign and security policy," said Elmar Brok, a German center-right EU lawmaker who heads the European Parliament's foreign affairs committee.

But EU officials say British fears of an EU army of soldiers wearing the same uniforms is overblown. EU Commission President Jean-Claude Juncker called for a European army in March 2015, but in reality, any capabilities that governments develop together, from radars to ships, will remain national.

The decision to relaunch closer military cooperation, which was first tried by Britain and France in the 1990s, is because no European nation has the resources to confront the failing states on Europe's borders, militant attacks or a resurgent Russia.

"The logic is overwhelming," said Nick Witney, a former head of the European Defence Agency that was set up in 2004 to improve Europe's defense capacities. "If you look at the scale of under-investment in Europe's defense technology, it requires Europe's military powers to develop together."

'Archipelago' system

One idea under discussion is a European investment fund for defense, which would allow EU governments who pay into it to also borrow so as to ensure funds are always available for joint defense programs. Those range from new helicopters to drones.

German Defence Minister Ursula von der Leyen talks to a KFOR German soldier during her visit at Camp Novo Selo in Kosovo, May 15, 2014. Hazir Reka/REUTERS The fund, which could start on a small scale in 2017, could be backed by the European Investment Bank to finance projects.

Other proposals could include enlarging cooperation between forces. Germany and the Netherlands have combined tank and naval forces and want to develop a common surface-to-air defense. French and British forces agreed in 2010 to work together.

"We have islands of cooperation. The idea is to link them into an archipelago," said a senior EU defense official.

Only 15 percent of the EU's defense investment went to collaborative projects in 2013, down from 26 percent in 2011, according to the European Defence Agency.

Germany and France say sharing of resources may be the only way to sustain adequate military forces. EU officials point to the merger of missile systems companies in France, Italy and Britain in 2001 to create MBDA, the only European group able to design and produce world-class missile systems.

"Europe can no longer afford the inefficiencies of duplication and over capacity that our existing fragmented market entails," the European Commission said in a defense paper.